Notice Serving

Serving an eviction notice sounds simple — but a single procedural error can invalidate your case and force you to start over. Rocket Eviction ensures every notice is prepared correctly, served legally, and documented properly so your eviction proceeding starts on solid ground.

Types of Notices We Serve

Nevada law requires a specific notice type for each situation. We identify the right one for your case.

Non-Payment of Rent

3-Day Pay or Quit Notice

The most common eviction notice. Issued when a tenant has failed to pay rent on time. The tenant has three calendar days to pay the full amount owed or vacate the property. This is the mandatory first step before filing an Unlawful Detainer.

  • Must state exact amount of rent owed
  • Must include the date rent was due
  • Proper service method is critical for court admissibility
Lease Violations

3-Day or 7-Day Cure or Quit

Used when a tenant has violated a term of the lease — such as unauthorized pets, unapproved occupants, or property damage. The tenant is given 3 or 7 days (depending on the violation) to correct the issue or vacate.

  • Notice must specifically describe the violation
  • Tenant must have a genuine opportunity to cure
  • 7-day notice for certain habitability-related issues
Repeat or Serious Violations

Unconditional Quit Notice

Issued when a tenant has committed repeated violations, engaged in criminal activity on the property, or caused substantial damage. No opportunity to cure is provided — the tenant must vacate within the notice period.

  • Used for drug activity, violence, or property destruction
  • Appropriate for second violations within six months
  • Requires specific documented evidence of violation
Month-to-Month Tenancy

30-Day Notice to Vacate

When you need to end a month-to-month tenancy without cause, Nevada law requires a 30-day written notice. This gives the tenant advance notice to find alternate housing and is required before any no-cause eviction filing.

  • Does not require any lease violation to issue
  • Must be served properly with documented proof
  • 60-day notice may apply for tenancies over one year

Our Notice Serving Process

A fast, reliable, court-ready service — from your first call to documented proof of service.

1

Tell Us About Your Situation

Call or email us with the details — tenant name, property address, reason for eviction, and any relevant lease information. We review the specifics of your case to determine the correct notice type and ensure nothing is missed.

2

We Prepare the Notice

Our team drafts a legally compliant notice that includes all required information under Nevada Revised Statutes. Every field — tenant name, property address, specific amounts owed, and response deadline — is verified for accuracy before we print.

3

We Serve the Notice

Nevada law prescribes acceptable service methods: personal delivery to the tenant, leaving it with a person of suitable age at the property, or posting and mailing. We use the method best suited to your situation and document every detail of the service.

4

You Receive Proof of Service

Once served, you receive a completed and signed Proof of Service document. This is essential for your court filing — it confirms the notice was served correctly and on time. Without it, your case can be dismissed on a technicality.

5

We Guide Your Next Steps

If the tenant fails to comply, we walk you through what comes next: filing the Unlawful Detainer, attending the Justice Court hearing, and if needed, coordinating lock changing once the order is granted. We’re with you through the whole process.

Why Professional Notice Serving Matters

A small mistake at this stage can unravel your entire eviction case.

Courts Demand Precision

Nevada Justice Courts are strict about eviction procedure. A notice served incorrectly — wrong delivery method, missing information, or wrong notice period — gives the tenant grounds to get your case dismissed. You’re then forced to restart from day one, losing weeks and rent income.

Proof of Service Is Non-Negotiable

Before your court hearing, you must file a Proof of Service showing how and when the notice was delivered. Without it, the judge has no basis to proceed. Our team provides a properly completed affidavit that meets all court requirements.

We Know Nevada Law

Eviction statutes in Nevada specify exactly which notice is required for each type of violation, how many days the tenant must be given, and which service methods are legally acceptable. We stay current on these requirements so you don’t have to.

Fast Turnaround When It Counts

Every day of delay costs you rent. We move quickly — most notices are prepared and served within 24 to 48 hours of your initial contact. We serve throughout Las Vegas, Henderson, North Las Vegas, and all of Clark County.